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MapReduce: Simplified Data Processing on Large Clusters Cloud Computing Seminar SEECS, NUST By Dr. Zahid Anwar.

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Presentation on theme: "MapReduce: Simplified Data Processing on Large Clusters Cloud Computing Seminar SEECS, NUST By Dr. Zahid Anwar."— Presentation transcript:

1 MapReduce: Simplified Data Processing on Large Clusters Cloud Computing Seminar SEECS, NUST By Dr. Zahid Anwar

2 Outline Lisp/ML map/fold review MapReduce overview

3 Functional Programming Review Functional operations do not modify data structures: They always create new ones Original data still exists in unmodified form Data flows are implicit in program design Order of operations does not matter

4 Functional Programming Review fun foo(l: int list) = sum(l) + mul(l) + length(l) Order of sum() and mul(), etc does not matter – they do not modify l

5 Functional Updates Do Not Modify Structures fun append(x, lst) = let lst' = reverse lst in reverse ( x :: lst' ) The append() function above reverses a list, adds a new element to the front, and returns all of that, reversed, which appends an item. But it never modifies lst!

6 Functions Can Be Used As Arguments fun DoDouble(f, x) = f (f x) It does not matter what f does to its argument; DoDouble() will do it twice. What is the type of this function?

7 Map map f lst: (’a->’b) -> (’a list) -> (’b list) Creates a new list by applying f to each element of the input list; returns output in order.

8 Fold fold f x 0 lst: ('a*'b->'b)->'b->('a list)->'b Moves across a list, applying f to each element plus an accumulator. f returns the next accumulator value, which is combined with the next element of the list

9 fold left vs. fold right Order of list elements can be significant Fold left moves left-to-right across the list Fold right moves from right-to-left SML Implementation: fun foldl f a [] = a | foldl f a (x::xs) = foldl f (f(x, a)) xs fun foldr f a [] = a | foldr f a (x::xs) = f(x, (foldr f a xs))

10 map Implementation This implementation moves left-to-right across the list, mapping elements one at a time … But does it need to? fun map f [] = [] | map f (x::xs) = (f x) :: (map f xs)

11 MapReduce

12 Motivation: Large Scale Data Processing Want to process lots of data ( > 1 TB) Want to parallelize across hundreds/thousands of CPUs … Want to make this easy

13 MapReduce Automatic parallelization & distribution Fault-tolerant Provides status and monitoring tools Clean abstraction for programmers

14 Programming Model Borrows from functional programming Users implement interface of two functions:  map (in_key, in_value) -> (out_key, intermediate_value) list  reduce (out_key, intermediate_value list) -> out_value list

15 map Records from the data source (lines out of files, rows of a database, etc) are fed into the map function as key*value pairs: e.g., (filename, line). map() produces one or more intermediate values along with an output key from the input.

16 reduce After the map phase is over, all the intermediate values for a given output key are combined together into a list reduce() combines those intermediate values into one or more final values for that same output key (in practice, usually only one final value per key)

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18 Parallelism map() functions run in parallel, creating different intermediate values from different input data sets reduce() functions also run in parallel, each working on a different output key All values are processed independently Bottleneck: reduce phase can’t start until map phase is completely finished.

19 Example: Count word occurrences map(String input_key, String input_value): // input_key: document name // input_value: document contents for each word w in input_value: EmitIntermediate(w, "1"); reduce(String output_key, Iterator intermediate_values): // output_key: a word // output_values: a list of counts int result = 0; for each v in intermediate_values: result += ParseInt(v); Emit(AsString(result));

20 Example vs. Actual Source Code Example is written in pseudo-code Actual implementation is in C++, using a MapReduce library Bindings for Python and Java exist via interfaces True code is somewhat more involved (defines how the input key/values are divided up and accessed, etc.)

21 Locality Master program divides up tasks based on location of data: tries to have map() tasks on same machine as physical file data, or at least same rack map() task inputs are divided into 64 MB blocks: same size as Google File System chunks

22 Fault Tolerance Master detects worker failures  Re-executes completed & in-progress map() tasks  Re-executes in-progress reduce() tasks Master notices particular input key/values cause crashes in map(), and skips those values on re-execution.  Effect: Can work around bugs in third-party libraries!

23 Optimizations No reduce can start until map is complete:  A single slow disk controller can rate-limit the whole process Master redundantly executes “slow- moving” map tasks; uses results of first copy to finish Why is it safe to redundantly execute map tasks? Wouldn’t this mess up the total computation?

24 MapReduce Conclusions MapReduce has proven to be a useful abstraction Greatly simplifies large-scale computations at Google Functional programming paradigm can be applied to large-scale applications Fun to use: focus on problem, let library deal w/ messy details


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